Why do you call them the "Labor Leadership?" They don't lead
labor, they lead for their corporate partners. What's needed is a new movement,
entirely democratic, which represents the interests of workers and the poor—too
often the same people. This is not an argument to do nothing....it's a position
for doing much more—first off, for dropping the pretense that the "labor
leadership" just needs a little tuning up from below. And do you really believe
that working people are "below" these guys?

Whatever energies we all have following our monied work days
could best be spent actually trying to form a new movement based on those things
that are most important to workers. I don't think the "Labor Leadership" or
their organizations are concerned with items like democracy, equality,
solidarity. I see them as enforcers for the boss and our enemies.

I love the folks I work with everyday. I can't think of any way
to interest them in Sweeney, the AFL or the UAW these days. They work hard. They
back each other up. They stand up to Ford. They hunt and fish together. Have
dinner with each other's families. They hate favoritism. They think the UAW is a
bad joke. If they didn't have to pay dues they wouldn't.

They went out and voted for Jessie Ventura in droves because
they were sick of UAW politics and union endorsements don't mean a damn thing to
them. They're bright. They might be interested in something that made democratic
sense to them.

Union reformers talk like these guys don't count for much. I get
the feeling that many reformers write most workers off because "the workers
don't get it." Well, they do get it and they're not interested in these phony,
anti-worker unions much.

We just got through a four- month fight for our rail loading
jobs here. The UAW threatened to give our jobs to scabs if we refused to
speedup. The local chairman bragged he would attack us in a plant-wide letter a
week ago. They criticized us for "not giving Ford a damn thing." They met apart
from us with new people on our crews who were on the company's side in a sleazy
effort to split us. Finally, we settled it without the union for 2.4 hours more
per train load of trucks than the UAW told us was the "bottom line."

This was not an isolated scene. In St. Louis, the UAW backed
Ford in removing UAW workers from rail jobs and replacing them with scabs. In
Norfolk, UAW workers were replaced by second class Teamsters. The new UAW head
at Ford has non-UAW workers doing this work at his home local. There is the CAT
situation, Flint, Lorain, a long list of despicable, union-backed attacks on
workers from the Mon Valley to P-9. The "Labor Leadership" has crushed labor
whenever workers have tried to fight.

I suggest we find a new involvement: Instead of looking for ways
to "push from below," why don't we look for the way people support each other
everyday on the job, look for groups of workers in our factories or offices who
are the like most of the guys I just described and try to connect all their
ideas across the workplace? And then we could talk about ways to organize real
unions that would be worker-run organizations that would then join with farmers
and other workers to revolutionize society.

It is a terrible waste of talent and energy to continue to beat
the same old, corrupt horse whose only militancy is reserved for beating down
the workers it is supposed to "lead."

Why not fight for something where when we win, we actually have
a victory?